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Transcript
Cultures of East Asia
Section 1
Cultures of East Asia
Section 1
Copy the following in your notebook
Leave space for your answers
• How did the Sui and Tang dynasties reunify China?
• How did the Song dynasty strengthen China?
• What were some Tang and Song cultural achievements?
• How was this period a time of prosperity and social change?
•
•
•
•
How did the Sui and Tang dynasties unite and expand China?
How did the Song strengthen China’s government?
How did Chinese innovations affect world history?
How did foot binding reflect changes in attitudes toward women
in China?
Cultures of East Asia
Chinese Empires
Preview
• Starting Points Map: East Asia
• Main Idea / Reading Focus
• Sui and Tang Dynasties
• Faces of History: Wu Zhao
• The Song Dynasty
• Map: Tang and Song Dynasties
Section 1
Cultures of East Asia
Chinese Empires
Preview, continued
• Cultural Achievements
• Quick Facts: Innovations
• Prosperity and Society
Section 1
Cultures of East Asia
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audio.
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Interactive Maps.
Section 1
Cultures of East Asia
Section 1
Chinese Empires
Main Idea
The Sui dynasty reunified China, after which the Tang and Song
dynasties produced an age of prosperity and achievement.
Reading Focus
• How did the Sui and Tang dynasties reunify China?
• How did the Song dynasty strengthen China?
• What were some Tang and Song cultural achievements?
• How was this period a time of prosperity and social change?
Section 1
Cultures of East Asia
Sui and Tang Dynasties
The Han dynasty ruled China from 206 BC to AD 220—more than 400
years. After the dynasty collapsed, military leaders split China into rival
kingdoms. These events began a period of disorder and warfare that
historians call the Period of Disunion.
The Period of Disunion
Civilization Thrived
• Nomads invaded northern China,
formed own kingdoms
• Despite these events, Chinese
civilization thrived, developed
• Many northern Chinese fled south
to region of Yangzi River
• Nomadic invaders in north adopted
aspects of Chinese civilization
• A number of southern dynasties
rose, fell
• Northern Chinese immigrants’
culture blended with local cultures
in south; arts, philosophy flowered
The Period of Disunion lasted more than 350 years, ending when a
northern ruler named Wendi reunified China, founding the Sui dynasty.
Section 1
Cultures of East Asia
The Sui Dynasty
Centralized Government
• Wendi worked to build
centralized government
Grand Canal
• Greatest accomplishment of Sui
dynasty, completed during reign
of Yangdi, Wendi’s son
• Restored order, created new
legal code, reformed
bureaucracy
• 1,000 mile waterway linked
northern, southern China
• Created policies to provide
adult males with land, ensure
availability of grain
• Yangdi forced millions of
peasants to work on canal; led
to discontent, rebellion
• 618, Yangdi assassinated, Sui
dynasty ended
Cultures of East Asia
Section 1
The Tang Dynasty
Period of Brilliance
• Tang dynasty ruled 618 to 907; Chinese influence spread
• China experienced period of brilliance, prosperity, cultural achievement
• Government, other institutions served as models across East Asia
Built on Sui Foundations
• Established capital at Chang’an, Sui capital
• Second capital located at Luoyang
• Government control remained centralized, based on bureaucracy of officials
Civil Service
• To obtain talented officials, Tang expanded civil service examination system
• People had to pass written exams to work for government
• Created flexible law code; model for law codes in Korea, Japan
Cultures of East Asia
Section 1
Foreign Affairs
• Tang expanded China, Chinese influence
• Regained western lands in Central Asia, gained influence over Korea
• Contact with Japan increased; Japanese scholars came to China to
study
• Expansion, increased contact with others grew foreign trade
Expansion
• Much of expansion occurred during reign of Taizong, 626 to 649
• Taizong relied on talented ministers to help govern
• In addition to military conquests, Taizong had schools built to prepare
students for civil service exams
• After his death, one of his sons became emperor
Section 1
Cultures of East Asia
Wu Zhao
New emperor was weak, sickly
• Emperor’s wife, Wu Zhao gained power
• Following death of husband
– Wu Zhao ruled through her sons
– Eventually became emperor herself—the only woman to do so
in Chinese history
• Wu Zhao overthrown, 705
– Dynasty reached height under Xuanzong
– During reign, 712 to 756, empire prospered
Cultures of East Asia
Section 1
Cultures of East Asia
Section 1
The Age of Buddhism
From India
• Buddhism first came to China from India during Han times
• During Period of Disunion many Chinese turned to Buddhism
• Taught people could escape suffering, appealed to people in turmoil
State Religion
• Under Tang rule, Buddhism became state religion
• Buddhist temples appeared across land, missionaries spread Buddhism
• 400 to 845 in China, Age of Buddhism; ended when lost official favor
Tang Decline
• 750s, decline began, government weak, nomadic invasions, rebellions
• Military defeats lost Tang lands in Central Asia and the north
• 907, emperor killed, Tang dynasty ended
Section 1
Cultures of East Asia
Summarize
How did the Sui and Tang dynasties unite
and expand China?
Answer(s): built centralized government;
reformed laws and policies; built Grand Canal;
Tang regained land in Central Asia and gained
influence over neighboring states; increased
contact with other peoples
Section 1
Cultures of East Asia
The Song Dynasty
After Tang Dynasty
• China split apart after Tang
dynasty
• Did not reunify until 960 with
Song dynasty
• Song ruled for about 300 years,
created achievement, prosperity
• Under Song, Chinese
civilization became most
advanced in world
Government and Civil Service
• Song established capital at
Kaifeng, restored centralized
government control
• Enlarged government
bureaucracy, reformed civil
service examination system
• Neo-Confucianism gained
favor, emphasizing Confucian
ethics, spiritual matters
Cultures of East Asia
Section 1
Civil Service Exams
• Extremely difficult to pass; those who did became scholar-officials
• Scholar-officials received good salary, were respected
• Civil service exams became more open to ordinary people
• Exams became pathway to gaining wealth, status
Southern Song
• Song rulers never regained northern, western lands lost by Tang
• Tried to buy peace with threatening nomads by sending lavish gifts
• 1120s, nomadic people, Jurchen, conquered northern China, founded
Jin empire
• Song continued in south as Southern Song dynasty 150 more years
Cultures of East Asia
Section 1
Section 1
Cultures of East Asia
Compare
How did the Song strengthen China’s
government?
Answer(s): established capital at Kaifeng and
restored centralized government control, enlarged
bureaucracy, reformed civil service exam
Section 1
Cultures of East Asia
Cultural Achievements
The Tang and Song dynasties were periods of great cultural
achievement. Art and literature flourished, and many inventions
and advances occurred in science and technology.
Literature and Art
Painting
• Tang period
produced some of
China’s greatest
poets
• Reached new
heights
• Exquisite objects
made from clay
• Wu Daozi, murals
celebrating
Buddhism, nature
• Tang: pottery
figurines, often to
go in tombs
• Landscapes of
great beauty
• Song: excelled at
making porcelain
• Some used only
black ink
• Admired, sought
after worldwide
• Du Fu, Li Bo, two
most famous
• Poems of
Confucian ideals,
joys of life
Artisans
Cultures of East Asia
Section 1
Inventions and Innovations
Architecture
Inventions
• Indian Buddhist temples
influenced design of Chinese
pagoda
• During Tang, Song periods,
China became a world leader in
technology, science
• Featured roofs at each floor
curving upwards at corners
• Gunpowder major invention,
used in fireworks, weapons
Magnetic Compass
Printing
• Major Tang technical advance
• Paper, ink invented earlier
• Uses Earth’s magnetic field to
show direction
• Tang period, developed
woodblock printing
• Revolutionized sea travel,
contributed to world exploration
• Text carved into wood, coated
with ink, pressed on paper
Cultures of East Asia
Section 1
Moveable Type
• Song dynasty invented another type of printing, moveable type
• Uses blocks on which letters, characters carved
• Blocks rearranged, reused to print many things
• Faster than woodblock, spread to Europe, revolutionized printing
Paper Money
• Another Song invention
• Had used bulky metal disks placed on strings
• As economy grew, lighter, more useful form of currency developed
• Paper money light, easy to use, quickly spread in use in China
Cultures of East Asia
Section 1
Cultures of East Asia
Section 1
Identify Cause and Effect
How did Chinese innovations affect world
history?
Answer(s): Gunpowder dramatically affected how
wars were fought; the compass allowed for world
navigation; printing innovations led to increased
sharing of ideas.
Section 1
Cultures of East Asia
Prosperity and Society
In addition to cultural achievements, the Tang and Song periods were
a time of growth and prosperity.
Agriculture
Trade
• Chinese agriculture became
more productive
– New irrigation techniques
– New variety of rice
– Production of cotton, tea
increased
• Increased food production
contributed to population growth
• Tang population 60 million, Song
population 100 million
• Improvements in roads, canals
increased trade within China
• Foreign trade expanded, mostly
over land routes like Silk Roads
• Late Tang: advances in sailing,
shipbuilding helped sea trade
• Song: merchants became
important in society; money,
banking began to develop
Section 1
Cultures of East Asia
City Life
• As farming, trade grew so did China’s cities
• China had largest cities in world at the time
• Tang capital, Chang’an, population more than 1 million, many cultures
• Song dynasty, several cities had million or more; sea trade caused port cities
to boom
• Despite urban growth, most Chinese still lived, farmed in countryside
Society
• Power of aristocratic families
declined during period
• New class developed, gentry
• Included scholar-officials, leading
landowners
• Most still peasants, farmers
• Paid most of taxes, little schooling
Women
• Status of women declined, most
visibly in upper classes
• Desire for small, dainty feet led to
custom of footbinding
• Painful process to keep feet from
growing, deformed feet over time
• Symbol of husband’s authority
Cultures of East Asia
Section 1
Draw Conclusions
How did footbinding reflect changes in
attitudes toward women in China?
Answer(s): became symbol of husband's
authority over wife; women's status declined